PT6W52 - Practice Education 5 (2026/27)
| Module specification | Module approved to run in 2026/27 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Module title | Practice Education 5 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Module level | Honours (06) | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Credit rating for module | 15 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| School | School of Human Sciences | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Total study hours | 200 | ||||||||||||||||||||
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| Assessment components |
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| Running in 2026/27(Please note that module timeslots are subject to change) | No instances running in the year |
Module summary
Practice Education 5: Consolidating Clinical Practice 2 is the fifth practice education module and second level 6 placement in the final year.
The module will provide opportunities for students to continue the development of their clinical practice through expanding their limits of clinical practice in another contemporary healthcare setting. Students will consolidate their skills for managing larger caseloads as they practice becoming autonomous physiotherapy practitioners.
Students will be allocated to another five-week block placement to practice theoretical knowledge and skills for the management of patients with different clinical conditions. Students will also have opportunities to consolidate their developing professionalism and inter-professional working with other healthcare professionals. Furthermore, they will have the opportunity to use this placement to demonstrate appropriate leadership behaviours within their scope of practice and competence.
Prior learning requirements
Pre-requisite: All level 5 modules
Co-requisites: PT6000, PT6P01, PT6050 PT6W51, PT6W53
Available for Study Abroad? NO
Syllabus
Knowledge
Practice education settings
Physiotherapy skills framework
Clinical placement assessment form
SWOC analysis
Personal development plan
Professional practice, standards, policies, and procedures
Models of clinical reasoning
Actions to maintain health and fitness to practice including seeking help.
Health and safety policies related to placement site.
Mandatory training including movement and handling policy, basic life support, information governance, safeguarding adults and children.
Skills
Professionalism: Application of safe practice including mandatory training and protocols.
Care, compassion respect and empathy.
Team working, time management, administrative duties, organisation.
Clinical skills: Assessment, treatment, and management of service users. Clinical reasoning, problem solving, enablement and goal setting.
Use of relevant professional documentation.
Shared decision making.
Transferring knowledge and skills from academic modules and the available evidence base to support practice.
Sustainability and inclusivity.
Communication with service users, educators, tutors, interdisciplinary team
members, support staff and other relevant parties.
Personal development: Reflection, personal and professional development and learning opportunities, contracts, guidance on job application and selection processes.
Adopting strategies to support own physical health and mental self-care
Adapting intervention to service users
Attitude
Behave ethically and with integrity.
Respect for all patients, promoting diversity, acknowledging patients’ rights include refusal of treatment.
Appreciation and enthusiasm for life-long learning
Independent and critical approach to learning
Understand own limitations.
Maximise benefits derived from various learning opportunities.
Balance of independent study and scheduled teaching activity
This module utilises experiential learning approaches of clinical simulation and five-day a week clinical placement in practice education settings for 6 weeks (block placement). Students will complete clinical simulation sessions during which patient assessment and management skills are developed in our skills laboratory in preparation for clinical practice. In addition, students will complete self-directed mandatory training to give them awareness of core knowledge required to work in a clinical setting.
During placements, students will learn through clinical observation, clinical practice, reflective practice, under the supervision of practice educators, and participate in clinical de-briefs with academic tutors in the University.
Learning outcomes
At the end of the module, students should:
Consistently practice as a physiotherapist within own scope of practice to gather and interpret relevant and detailed information from clinical assessments and other sources to understand common problems with different groups of service users in a clinical setting.
Consistently demonstrate safe and effective evidence-based practice within own scope of practice during placement including maintenance of own fitness to practice, interprofessional working, professionalism, interpersonal skills, clinical reasoning, assessment, treatment/management, monitoring, evaluation with appropriate outcome measures, record keeping and quality assurance.
Communicate effectively and confidently using advanced communication skills with different groups of service users, carers, clinical educators, and appropriate members of the interdisciplinary team to provide information and achieve optimal outcomes, including for family support and other care givers’ needs.
Critically evaluate and apply key theoretical perspectives under-pinning effective physiotherapy assessment, management, and advanced clinical reasoning.
Demonstrate increasing confidence to effectively organise, prioritise, manage own workload and showcase developing leadership capabilities through supporting the development of others.
Consistently reflect on own practice and respond appropriately to feedback during practice placements and take responsibility for own learning needs and identify areas for continuing professional development.
Bibliography
https://rl.talis.com/3/londonmet/lists/D12D1BDF-83A3-6224-1BFF-D64EC7528D77.html
Textbooks
Clinical Reasoning in the Health Professions E-Book, edited by Joy Higgs, et al., Elsevier Health Sciences, 2008.
White, Sue, et al. Critical Reflection in Health and Social Care, McGraw-Hill Education, 2006.
Kenyon, K. and Kenyon, J. (2018). The physiotherapist’s pocketbook: essential facts at your fingertips. 3rd edition. Edinburgh: Elsevier.
Cross, J., Broad, M. A., Quint, M. J., Ritson, P. and Thomas, S. (eds) (2020) Respiratory physiotherapy pocketbook: an on-call survival guide. Third edition. Edinburgh: Elsevier.
Lennon, S., Ramdharry, G., Verheyden, G. (2018). Neurological Physiotherapy Pocketbook. 2nd edition. Edinburgh: Elsevier.
Journal Articles
Atkinson HL, Nixon-Cave K. (2011). A tool for clinical reasoning and reflection using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) framework and patient management model. Phys Ther. 91:416 – 430
Donaghy, M. and Morss, K. (2000). Guided reflection: A framework to facilitate and assess reflective practice within the discipline of physiotherapy. Physiotherapy Theory & Practice. 16, (1), 3-14.
A good article for understanding what reflection and reflective practice is in physiotherapy education and the healthcare setting.
Publications
CHARTERED SOCIETY OF PHYSIOTHERAPY, 2013. Quality Assurance standards for physiotherapy service delivery. London: CSP
HEALTH & CARE PROFESSIONS COUNCIL, 2016. Standards of conduct, performance, and ethics. London: HCPC.
CHARTERED SOCIETY OF PHYSIOTHERAPY CSP (2011). Physiotherapy Framework: putting physiotherapy behaviours, values, knowledge & skills into practice [updated May 2020]
HEALTH & CARE PROFESSIONS COUNCIL, (2023). Standards of Proficiency (Physiotherapy) London: HCPC
